Noemí

"Variant of Naomi. Pleasantness, delight"

♀ Féminin · Hebrew
biblical elegant cross-cultural variant

📖 À propos Noemí

Noemí est la forme espagnole de Naomi (hébreu, 'douceur'), accentuée sur la dernière syllabe et profondément enracinée dans la tradition catholique espagnole et latino-américaine ; elle raconte la même histoire de deuil et de restauration que la biblique Ruth et Naomi, et porte une résonance espagnole contemporaine à travers la directrice musicale Noemí Galera d’Operación Triunfo.

📍 Détails

  • OrigineHebrew
  • Genre♀ Féminin
  • SignificationVariant of Naomi. Pleasantness, delight

🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés

⭐ Personnes Célèbres

  • Naomi/Noemí (biblical figure) — Israelite woman from Bethlehem and central figure of the Book of Ruth; after losing her husband and sons in Moab, she renamed herself Mara ('bitterness'), but her name Naomi (pleasantness) was restored through the loyalty of her daughter-in-law Ruth and the prosperity that followed; the Book of Ruth is one of only two Hebrew Bible books named after a woman, and Naomi/Noemí is its beating heart.
  • Noemí Galera — Spanish music director and television personality (born 1965), best known as the longtime director of Operación Triunfo (OT), the Spanish edition of Pop Idol; under her artistic direction, the show launched the careers of major Spanish artists including David Bisbal, David Bustamante, and Alejandro Abad; her work has shaped Spanish popular music for over two decades.
  • Noemi (Italian singer) — Italian singer-songwriter (born Veronica Scopelliti, 1982), who performs professionally as Noemi; known for her powerful voice and emotionally charged pop-rock ballads; she won the Sanremo Music Festival critics' prize and has released multiple platinum albums; one of the most distinctive vocal presences in contemporary Italian music.
  • Noemí (in Spanish Catholic tradition) — In the Spanish Bible tradition, Noemí is the name used for the biblical Naomi in the Reina-Valera and other Spanish scriptural translations; the name has been used in Catholic Spain and Latin America for centuries as a devotional name honouring the figure of Ruth’s mother-in-law, whose story of loyalty, loss, and renewal resonates deeply in Spanish-speaking Christian communities.